THHEE LMMAALA ACCO OLLOOGGIICCALL SSOCCIIEETTYY 239.pdf · Cowrie Beach presumably gets its name...
Transcript of THHEE LMMAALA ACCO OLLOOGGIICCALL SSOCCIIEETTYY 239.pdf · Cowrie Beach presumably gets its name...
TTHHEE MMAALLAACCOOLLOOGGIICCAALL SSOOCCIIEETTYY
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VVIICCTTOORRIIAANN BBRRAANNCCHH BBUULLLLEETTIINN (Mailed to financial members of the Society within Victoria)
Price 50¢
EDITOR: Val Cram. Tel. No. 9792 9163
ADDRESS: 6 Southdean Street, Dandenong, Vic. 3175
EMAIL: [email protected]
VIC. BR. BULL. NO. 239 JUNE/JULY 2007
NOTICE OF MEETING
The next meeting of the Branch will be held on the 18th of June Melbourne Camera Club Building, cnr. Dorcas
& Ferrars Sts South Melbourne at 8pm. This will be a Member’s Night.
Raffles and supper as usual.
There is no meeting in July.
The next meeting will be on the 20th of August The August September bulletin will be issued prior to this date.
Meeting reports for May and June will be published in the next bulletin.
Secretary Michael Lyons Tel. No. 9894 1526
Chairman Fred Bunyard Tel. No. 9439 2147
Printed courtesy of Steve Herberts Office, Parliamentary Member for Eltham
Conus marmoreus Linne
VIC. BR. BULL. NO. 239 2. JUNE/JULY 2007
Victorian Cerithiopsids - a progress report.
Cerithiopsids are small gastropods, usually less than 10mm long, and often found on sponges (which is
apparently their food source), in seagrasses and sand sievings. They are usually overlooked because of their
size. They are also difficult to identify due mainly to poor descriptions initially and lack of good illustrations (if
any) by the original author. Little is known of the live animals as washings and sievings have usually
decomposed by the time the microfauna is sorted from a collection. Over the past couple of years I have been
looking at the Victorian fauna to see what might be done. For this I have used collections kindly loaned by
members of the Mal Soc Vic and the Museum Victoria collections. I hope that over the next several issues of
the Branch Bulletin the notes and figures I give might enable collectors to better identify their material. I am
greatly indebted to Joan Hales, Edna Tenner, Jack Austin, Bob Burn, the late Noel Coleman, Max Marrow,
Geoff Macauley and Alan Monger for the loan of their material.
In Victoria 12 species are listed in MMV, but on going through the above collections it seems that at least
28 species are present. This may seem a large number but, for NSW, Laseron (1951) described 40 species and
for northern Australia 43 species (Laseron 1956) and suggested that perhaps the number `...will run well into
three figures'. In South Aust. Cotton (1951) described 20 species. [Wilson (1993, p.255) though has called both
Cotton and Laseron `chronic splitters']. Cotton mentions a couple of distribution records for WA. May's 1921
Tasmanian checklist has 11 species. Marshall (1978) has described the NZ fauna. There are another 5 or so that
due to their highly sculptured protoconchs may perhaps be better placed in the Triphorid Metaxiinae
subfamily.
Identification of species: It must be stressed at the outset that these identifications are based solely on the
shell characters as no descriptions of any of the animals have been made, indeed animals are not known for
most of the species. It has become apparent that the protoconch whorls are of great importance, particularly in
distinguishing similarly sculptured species. Beachworn specimens without protoconch are virtually impossible
to identify. Cotton based his key to genera mainly on protoconch differences and Laseron and Marshall both
considered it to be a constant specific character. More recently Rolan & Pelorce (2006) found that for the Seila
spp in West Africa the protoconch was the most constant specific character. The protoconch may be smooth,
faintly striated or more sculptured and the number of whorls (including the nucleoconch) may vary from 1 to 5
or more. I have taken differing protoconchs to indicate different species, and there are usually other differences
as well when the specimens are looked at in detail e.g protoconch sculpture if any, number of ribs/ whorl,
strength of axials, suture depressed or not, shape of columella, shape of aperture, strength of clathrate sculpture,
whorls inflated or not, etc. For generic placement I have followed Laseron's 1956 Key (which will be given
later).
There are two main species groups - those with only spiral ribs as sculpture, and those with a nodular sculpture
formed from both spiral and axial ribbing. In the spiral ribbed group there are 6 species, Seila crocea, S.
albosutura, S. marmorata, S. halligani, Euseila insignis and one unnamed new species. In the nodular forms
there are 6 named species - Synthopsis semilaevis, Specula turboniloides, Joculator cessicius, Tubercliopsis
septapilia, TT infracolor, Socienna dannevigi, and at leastl6 unnamed, all possibly new, species. There seems to
be very little in common with NSW fauna as listed by Laseron (1951).
Seilarex turritelliformis (Angas, 1877) [= Seila attenuata Hedley, 1899], which is listed in MMV, and the
related South Australian S. verconis Cotton, 1951, are now considered by Marshall (1983) not to be
cerithiopsids but to belong in the Triphoridae, subfamily Metaxiinae because of their highly sculptured
protoconeschs, i.e they are right-handed triphorids!
References
Cotton, BC. 1951. Australian Recent and Tertiary Mollusca Family Cerithiopsidae. Rec. South Australian
Museum 9: 383-396.
Laseron, CF. 1951. Revision of the NSW Cerithiopsidae. Australian Zoologist 11: 351-368.
Laseron, CF. 1956. The family Cerithiopsidae (Mollusca) from the Solandrian and Dampierian
Zoogeographical Provinces. Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 7:151-182.
Marshall, B. 1978. Cerithiopsidae (Mollusca: Gasropoda) of New Zealand, and a provisional
classification of the family. New Zealand Journal of Zoology 5: 47-120.
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Marshall, B. 1983. A revision of the Recent Triphoridae of Southern Australia (Mollusca: Gastropoda). Records
of the Australian Museum Supplement 2.
May, WL. 1921. A checklist of the Mollusca of Tasmania. Government Printer, Tasmania. 114p. Rolan, E. &
Pelorce, J. 2006. The genus Seila in West Africa (Gastropoda, Cerithiopsidae).Basteria, supplement 3: 73-79.
Wilson, B. 1993. Australian Marine Shells, Prosobranch Gastropods 1. (Odyssey Publishing, Western
Australia).
Ken Bell
The above article is the first in a series by Ken to be published over the next few issues to present short notes on
each species (there are about 30 all told) to help collectors identify material.
Beach collecting at Bermagui
There is more to Bermagui (if you can believe it) than just fishing! I had a chance on two occasions (in 2002
and 2006) to visit the town, on both occasions staying at the Bermagui South pub from which it is a very short
walk to the rocky headland of Point Dickinson. A short stretch of sand on the northern side of the point is
known locally as Cowrie Beach and it is here that I found coarse accumulations of shell which proved to be
quite productive. Although samples were taken for microscopic analysis the smaller shells (1 – 5 mm) were not
of the same quality or diversity seen elsewhere on the trips (eg. Huskisson and Eden). Nevertheless the
macroscopic species were often excellent and notes on some of the more interesting finds are included below.
Amongst the early prosobranchs at Bermagui the Trochidae are most striking. Clanculus brunneus is very
common on the beach, often with vivid pink or red-and-cream patterns that do not seem to occur in our local
relative C. limbatus. Clanculus clangulus also occurs on the beach, the best specimens being truly spectacular
with broad blood-red rays over olive-green on the spire with strawberry-spotting similar to that of Calliostoma
hedleyi on the base. Stomatella impertusa is also common at the locality, again in many colour variations
including one which is a homogeneous dark brown with one or two spiral bands of pink. An exciting find was
the rare Turbo exquisitus, the specimen collected being orange with a yellow band peripherally. Canberra
collector and diver Angus Hawke, who has collected this species alive at Gosford, informs me that a similar
species was described recently from WA.
Cowrie Beach presumably gets its name from Neveria merces which is quite common and ranges greatly in
size (6.7 to 15.9mm). Only a single fragment of Notocypraea was sighted. Other relatives present were several
nice Lachryma lachryma and one specimen of the northern species Trivirostra oryza. Sorting through grit from
7 Mar 2006 I was stunned to encounter a specimen of the ovulid Prosimnia semperi (fig A). This species is
more at home in the Philippines and I recalled reading in Wilson's AMS that it is found south only as far as
Sydney heads. However Edgar (1997) in his `Australian Marine Life' illustrates a living specimen and records
it as far south as Merimbula. Returning to N. merces members may wish to note the updated generic
placement of this species (formerly in Trivia or Ellatrivia). The new name appears in the recent edition of
`Coastal Invertebrates of Victoria' published by the MRG.
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Moving on to the neogastropods Bermagui yielded a few specimens of the elegant muricid Phyllocoma
speciosa (figs C+D). Also collected was one specimen of Litozamia rudolphi (fig B), a species I had not seen
previously. It vaguely resembles our Litozamia petterdi and L. brazieri but is smaller and narrower, with
intermediate sculpture and a slightly different colour pattern. The marginellid figured in Jansen (1995) as
Haloginella mustelina is quite common. Wilson's AMS prefers the genus Volvarina. It is a colourful species,
one of our few, and also occurs in New Zealand. Other prizes included one specimen of the aptly-named
Belloliva exquisita (fig G) and one also of the cancellarid Trigonostoma laseroni (fig H). The latter is a rare
species which has also been collected at Congo (between Batemans Bay and Narooma). It is not illustrated in
Wilson, the figure is taken from Iredale's original description. As noted in a recent bulletin (No. 236) the
heterobranch Philippia lutea is very common at the locality and other species of sundial may be found
including Psilaxis oxytropis, Heliacus ponderi and Heliacus implexus.
One interesting aspect of collecting at Bermagui is the occurrence of some tropical and subtropical species. The
same East Australia Current which brings tropical gamefish to the locality also brings exotic mollusc veligers
and I was surprised to see species such as Epitonium perplexum, Vanikoro cancellata and Bullina lineata.
Wilson's AMS records Trivirostra oryza to southern QLD and Pyrene scripta to northern NSW however I can
confirm collecting both at Bermagui. Prosimnia semperi has already been mentioned. I have seen none of
these species in Twofold Bay just a short distance south of Bermagui, indeed many of them were absent from
Huskisson in Jervis Bay to the north.
Overall Bermagui is an interesting site which I hope to return to. I made little attempt to search for live
molluscs on either visit however I did notice that Cabanesta spengleri were very common on cunvejoi at low
tide. Point Dickinson would also most likely be an excellent site for diving, particularly as this would allow a
search for living Prosimnia semperi which live on gorgonians of the genus Mopsella. Tom Byron's dive guide
to southern NSW gives a detailed site description including several interesting pieces of information such as the
presence of a gorgonian patch in 18 metres of water accessible from the shore and the congregation of unusual
tropical fish in the warmer months.
Source of figures:
A: Prosimnia semperi from Wilson (1994), `Australian Marine Shells' vol. 1 p. 207
B: Litozamia rudolphi from Henn & Brazier (1894), Proc. Linn. Soc. NSW. vol. 19. p. 166. pl. 14 fig 1.
C+D: Phyllocoma speciosa from Angas (1871), Proc. Zool. Soc. London. p. 13. pl. 1. fig. 1
E+F: Haloginella mustelina from Angas (1871), Proc. Zool. Soc. London. p. 14. pl. 1 fig. 5
G: Belloliva exquisita – self-illustrated, ~7.0mm shell collected 6 Mar 2006
H: Trigonostoma laseroni from Iredale (1936), Rec. Aust. Mus. vol. 19. p. 318. pl. 24. fig. 10
Lynton Stephens Trivia zzyzyxia Cate, 1979
Have you noticed? This name appears on pape211 of Vol.1 of Wilson’s Australian Marine Shells. But don’t
panic, no need to memorise this spelling from the back end of our alphabet. I doubt it is early Latin, more like
whimsy. Some years ago the telephone directory publishers called on people registering surnames beginning
with Aaa or Zz to provide legal proof of such names, during a scramble to be first or last in the directory.
Cate may have been after such malacological recognition, and he has achieved it, in AMS at least, even if it is
but a synonym. Nice try.
Jack Austin